Agency Procurement Guide

Contracts with the Department of the Army

Army contracting flows through ACC (Aberdeen, Redstone, Warren, Rock Island, APG), MICC (installation services), USACE (construction), and PEO-level program offices. The Army is also the lead service for many joint programs like JLTV.

Procurement overview

Annual contract obligations
~$175B
Mission
Land warfare, training, and logistics
Procurement office
Army Contracting Command (ACC)

Contract vehicles used most

  • ITES-3S/4H
  • OASIS+
  • RS3
  • BOS MATOC

How businesses win bids with the Army

ACC-Aberdeen and ACC-Warren are particularly accessible for small businesses. Tracking SBIR.gov topics from DEVCOM and CCDC routinely yields entry-point Phase I awards.

Most active NAICS codes

Industries that sell most to Army

States with the most Army contracting activity

FAQs

How much does the Department of the Army spend on contracts annually?
The Department of the Army obligates approximately $175 billion in contracts each fiscal year.
What contract vehicles does the Department of the Army use most?
Common contract vehicles include ITES-3S/4H, OASIS+, RS3, BOS MATOC.
What NAICS codes are most used by the Department of the Army?
The most-used NAICS codes are 541330 (Engineering Services); 541512 (Computer Systems Design Services); 336992 (Military Armored Vehicle, Tank & Tank Component Manufacturing).
How do small businesses win work with the Department of the Army?
ACC-Aberdeen and ACC-Warren are particularly accessible for small businesses. Tracking SBIR.gov topics from DEVCOM and CCDC routinely yields entry-point Phase I awards.
Where is the Department of the Army's procurement office?
Primary procurement oversight sits with the Army Contracting Command (ACC).

Official procurement resources

Track federal RFPs in BidScopePro

Generate compliant federal estimates and proposals in minutes. Free 7-day trial.